Today, President Barack Obama
will make his fourth visit to Mexico and continue on to Costa Rica on
what is moreover his sixth visit to Latin America. On this journey, the
President hopes to emphasize and support the deep cultural, familial,
and fiscal ties that so many Americans share with Mexico and Central
America, and to encourage financial growth across the region.
Ahead of these visits, President Obama assembles two important sessions
at the White House to hear from U.S. businesses and U.S. Latino leaders.
The reason of these meetings was to hear from business working straight in the region, and organizations with a meticulous interest in Latin America and its Diasporas in the United States, about ways to foster fiscal development and growth for our shared prospect as a hemisphere.
The reason of these meetings was to hear from business working straight in the region, and organizations with a meticulous interest in Latin America and its Diasporas in the United States, about ways to foster fiscal development and growth for our shared prospect as a hemisphere.
Last Friday, a cluster of business leaders, representing a cross-section
of companies doing business in Mexico and Latin America, held a
vigorous conversation with the President.
The meeting was a chance for the President to hear concerning emerging trends in the Western Hemisphere and what the United States government can do to foster fiscal growth in the Americas to help companies make jobs for middle class families on both sides of the border.
The meeting was a chance for the President to hear concerning emerging trends in the Western Hemisphere and what the United States government can do to foster fiscal growth in the Americas to help companies make jobs for middle class families on both sides of the border.
Business legislature offered strong support for measures projected to
facilitate global and hemispheric trade, such as the Trans-Pacific
Partnership. They highlighted the growing consequence of the energy
sector during the Americas and the need for infrastructure improvement
to assist cross-border trade.
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